I've just started discussions on a new phone and provider. I don't understand the contract issues. Started with Rogers and they don't apply any penalty for cancelling a new contract and your only obligation is to pay off the outstanding amount owed on the phone that they subsidized. I assume this could be a "penalty" if they overcharged you for the phone but that cost is clear in the contract. Am I missing something?
Those two words generate fear in any business endeavour. Simply put, if what's out there and available is "good enough", e.g., meets enough of the consumers' needs that their desire or the pain factor is low enough, then new products face an uphill battle. When it comes to those copper loops, they continue to deliver "good enough" voice and data services that in most cases are "good enough". They'll be there for quite a long time.
Yes, the master of political intrigue has some words of wisdom when it comes to upgrades.
"It must be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to plan, more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to manage than a new system. For the initiator has the enmity of all who would profit by the preservation of the old institution and merely lukewarm defenders in those who gain by the new ones."
While his use of system is more generic, the general principle and sentiments remain the same 500 years later. He would have made a kick-ass CIO.
?????
At the barest minimum, if you're going to make life for your customers painful (e.g.. an upgrade imposing downtime, degraded service, h/w swap outs, etc) THEN you at least give them a heads up about what's coming and if possible, some guidance on how to minimize the pain. That said, if you can avoid impacting your customers, you perform some due diligence, hell, even do some testing before hand.
Many small businesses have effectively "eliminated" pennies with a small container at the cash that contains pennies. Need a few pennies, take them from the container. Received a few pennies in your change? Drop them in the container. I don't think I've had pennies in my pocket for a long time. Government is finally just catching up.
A real live example of the "devil you know...". Like the poster, I'm no fan of US Internet oversight but until convinced otherwise, I would not want to take a chance with the UN and more importantly, some of the despotic governments that would jump on with the ITU. If you want an example of what UN control of the Internet might look like, take a look at who's on the UN Human Rights Council.
There seems to be endless gnashing of teeth over this issue. How about we just let the market, e.g., you and I along with everyone else decide? Let papers opt out and Google just stops placing their articles on their news page. If readership and revenues drop, the papers always have the option to come back. If not, then they don't. I've always struggle with the papers' position. Google introduces their articles to a lot of people. Google gets something in return. If publishers don't like that arrangement, then there are solutions. I'm a missing something?
This is Australia right? The country obsessed with nation-wide censorship. I'll take my slower speed access here in Canada to ALL Net-based content versus super fast access to government-approved content. This sounds like a technology spin on the Time Machine with Eloi and Morlocks. Eloi are happy consumers content with their super fast access to Facebook, Youtube, etc all monitored and censored by our government Morlocks. A bit conspiratorial but really, I'm surprised someone like the Woz would be blinded by technology.
Dead on! (pardon the pun). Aircraft carriers extend US influence to all major ports and most major industrial areas given their proximity to the coastline. The rest of the carrier group is designed to protect the air craft carriers.
They are probably vulnerable to newer missile technologies but these reside with nuclear powers and by default, potential adversaries that would not engage the US in war.
Until there is an Exocet-like missile, cheap and effective against carriers that any country could deploy and use, carriers will be the work horse of the US navy, delivering firepower and by inference, influence where required.
This problem reminds me of the situations when the government decides for one reason or another that you are dead and declares it thus so (cue Captain Picard "Make it so"). Then the very much alive person (aka the primary source) engages the bureaucracy in a battle of wits to rescind that declaration. If we could all just write a letter to the New Yorker to resolve the problem, life would be good.
Amazon's Kindle Fire is first and foremost a storefront for the rest of Amazon. The e-reader functionality is the tease to bring you into the store, or online to be more specific. This doesn't mean Amazon is evil but does explain their behaviour. To quote Bezos "We want to make money when people use our devices, not when they buy our devices," As a consumer, you always have a choice.
Not trying to bait anyone but I run a small business. We have Microsoft and Apple desktops along with iPhone and Blackberries. These are all TOOLS that we use in our business to generate revenue. They are a means to an end (back to the money theme). We are definitely more technically conversant that the average consumer and I have yet to see an argument that would make me consider a Linux desktop. God help anyone trying to sell Linux to the general public.
I think what many Linux fans don't know about is a formidable market entry rule called "Good Enough". It's a killer. It's inertia squared. It's the challenge that you face when people don't feel enough pain. It's the devil you know challenge.
Unless Linux and it's advocates are able to address this challenge or Apple/Microsoft make it easier (which is highly unlikely) then the Linux desktop is a great forum discussion, but not much more than that.
This is a perfect example of an arms race where one side has no governor (my hat tip to the earlier Jefferson reference). James succinctly described the rationale and process by which DCMA laws came into being. However, the fatal flaw is that DCMA enforces no penalty for excessive false positives. Consequently, as a content owner, it is in my best interest to take down first and ask (actually, they never ask) questions later. Businesses are driven to maximize the value of their product. Creating scarcity is a straightforward and easily understood concept. DCMA is just one more tool by which a business can achieve this goal.
That said, creating a monopoly was and is to a degree, another time-honoured tradition of creating scarcity and maximizing value. However, that was legislated as illegal. Likewise, there is an opportunity to amend DCMA and create a governor that addresses egregious false positive offenders. The penalties could be administrative, lose their privilege to use automated take downs (e.g., take away their toys) or even financial. Effectively, you would create a new line to quote James that balances the process.
Will this happen? Unlikely unless organizations with influence and money are consistently impacted by the current law. Other than the rare case as we've seen here, that has not happened and the status quo is likely to remain.
The fundamental problem with the current situation is that there is no "pain" (e.g., financial penalty) for these erroneous takedowns and that's the problem with DMCA. I wonder what the online world would look like if there was an equivalent "3 strikes" rule for false takedowns. After that, the escalating financial penalties kicked in, with damages going to the aggrieved party.
Business understands money. Frame action and inaction in that context and business tends to behave in a predicable fashion, most of the time.
Attributed quote to Lincoln: "You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time." No, he probably is correct but with the Internet, "some of the people" is big enough to make a great living as a scammer.
It's inferred that this warehouse was Amazon but never confirmed http://www.motherjones.com/rights-stuff/2011/09/amazon-warehouse-heat-shipping. There is always a price for free shipping and low prices. Just because you cannot or do not want to see it, does not mean it isn't there.
Now, I need to go order that Rob Zombie Voodoo Doll.
I'm assuming the Chinese company is using a rule of thumb that the building has to stand one day longer than it took to build to be classified as "successful"?
I did not think there was any expectation of privacy when using corporate email and by default, web services. Would that not make the https process a moot point?
Who cares about the margin of error, exact number of years, agnostic versus atheist, church versus state separation or any of the other hair splitting. We're talking that somewhere round 40% of Americans completely discount all fact and science (the proven stuff, no theories involved) and believe that God automagically created humans as they are now. Holy craps Batman! This is 40% of a population that controls the world's only superpower. Give me a minute while I breath into a paper bag. It's one thing for nutcases in Iran to run around screaming Allah is great. It's a totally different case when a substantial portion of the US voting population effectively believes the same thing. I gotta go back to my paper bag......
For a somewhat more interesting look at Internet porn and males, this talk by Cindy Gallop is pretty good. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_oliuLf7-30
Do note that is 13 minutes long and outside of the porn-saturated attention span of most males.....
I've just started discussions on a new phone and provider. I don't understand the contract issues. Started with Rogers and they don't apply any penalty for cancelling a new contract and your only obligation is to pay off the outstanding amount owed on the phone that they subsidized. I assume this could be a "penalty" if they overcharged you for the phone but that cost is clear in the contract. Am I missing something?
Those two words generate fear in any business endeavour. Simply put, if what's out there and available is "good enough", e.g., meets enough of the consumers' needs that their desire or the pain factor is low enough, then new products face an uphill battle. When it comes to those copper loops, they continue to deliver "good enough" voice and data services that in most cases are "good enough". They'll be there for quite a long time.
Yes, the master of political intrigue has some words of wisdom when it comes to upgrades. "It must be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to plan, more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to manage than a new system. For the initiator has the enmity of all who would profit by the preservation of the old institution and merely lukewarm defenders in those who gain by the new ones." While his use of system is more generic, the general principle and sentiments remain the same 500 years later. He would have made a kick-ass CIO.
????? At the barest minimum, if you're going to make life for your customers painful (e.g.. an upgrade imposing downtime, degraded service, h/w swap outs, etc) THEN you at least give them a heads up about what's coming and if possible, some guidance on how to minimize the pain. That said, if you can avoid impacting your customers, you perform some due diligence, hell, even do some testing before hand.
Many small businesses have effectively "eliminated" pennies with a small container at the cash that contains pennies. Need a few pennies, take them from the container. Received a few pennies in your change? Drop them in the container. I don't think I've had pennies in my pocket for a long time. Government is finally just catching up.
A real live example of the "devil you know...". Like the poster, I'm no fan of US Internet oversight but until convinced otherwise, I would not want to take a chance with the UN and more importantly, some of the despotic governments that would jump on with the ITU. If you want an example of what UN control of the Internet might look like, take a look at who's on the UN Human Rights Council.
There seems to be endless gnashing of teeth over this issue. How about we just let the market, e.g., you and I along with everyone else decide? Let papers opt out and Google just stops placing their articles on their news page. If readership and revenues drop, the papers always have the option to come back. If not, then they don't. I've always struggle with the papers' position. Google introduces their articles to a lot of people. Google gets something in return. If publishers don't like that arrangement, then there are solutions. I'm a missing something?
This is Australia right? The country obsessed with nation-wide censorship. I'll take my slower speed access here in Canada to ALL Net-based content versus super fast access to government-approved content. This sounds like a technology spin on the Time Machine with Eloi and Morlocks. Eloi are happy consumers content with their super fast access to Facebook, Youtube, etc all monitored and censored by our government Morlocks. A bit conspiratorial but really, I'm surprised someone like the Woz would be blinded by technology.
Dead on! (pardon the pun). Aircraft carriers extend US influence to all major ports and most major industrial areas given their proximity to the coastline. The rest of the carrier group is designed to protect the air craft carriers.
They are probably vulnerable to newer missile technologies but these reside with nuclear powers and by default, potential adversaries that would not engage the US in war.
Until there is an Exocet-like missile, cheap and effective against carriers that any country could deploy and use, carriers will be the work horse of the US navy, delivering firepower and by inference, influence where required.
Consider the Conde Nast experiment with Reddit which appears to be working out so far, five years later.
This problem reminds me of the situations when the government decides for one reason or another that you are dead and declares it thus so (cue Captain Picard "Make it so"). Then the very much alive person (aka the primary source) engages the bureaucracy in a battle of wits to rescind that declaration. If we could all just write a letter to the New Yorker to resolve the problem, life would be good.
Amazon's Kindle Fire is first and foremost a storefront for the rest of Amazon. The e-reader functionality is the tease to bring you into the store, or online to be more specific. This doesn't mean Amazon is evil but does explain their behaviour. To quote Bezos "We want to make money when people use our devices, not when they buy our devices," As a consumer, you always have a choice.
Not trying to bait anyone but I run a small business. We have Microsoft and Apple desktops along with iPhone and Blackberries. These are all TOOLS that we use in our business to generate revenue. They are a means to an end (back to the money theme). We are definitely more technically conversant that the average consumer and I have yet to see an argument that would make me consider a Linux desktop. God help anyone trying to sell Linux to the general public.
I think what many Linux fans don't know about is a formidable market entry rule called "Good Enough". It's a killer. It's inertia squared. It's the challenge that you face when people don't feel enough pain. It's the devil you know challenge.
Unless Linux and it's advocates are able to address this challenge or Apple/Microsoft make it easier (which is highly unlikely) then the Linux desktop is a great forum discussion, but not much more than that.
This is a perfect example of an arms race where one side has no governor (my hat tip to the earlier Jefferson reference). James succinctly described the rationale and process by which DCMA laws came into being. However, the fatal flaw is that DCMA enforces no penalty for excessive false positives. Consequently, as a content owner, it is in my best interest to take down first and ask (actually, they never ask) questions later. Businesses are driven to maximize the value of their product. Creating scarcity is a straightforward and easily understood concept. DCMA is just one more tool by which a business can achieve this goal.
That said, creating a monopoly was and is to a degree, another time-honoured tradition of creating scarcity and maximizing value. However, that was legislated as illegal. Likewise, there is an opportunity to amend DCMA and create a governor that addresses egregious false positive offenders. The penalties could be administrative, lose their privilege to use automated take downs (e.g., take away their toys) or even financial. Effectively, you would create a new line to quote James that balances the process.
Will this happen? Unlikely unless organizations with influence and money are consistently impacted by the current law. Other than the rare case as we've seen here, that has not happened and the status quo is likely to remain.
The fundamental problem with the current situation is that there is no "pain" (e.g., financial penalty) for these erroneous takedowns and that's the problem with DMCA. I wonder what the online world would look like if there was an equivalent "3 strikes" rule for false takedowns. After that, the escalating financial penalties kicked in, with damages going to the aggrieved party. Business understands money. Frame action and inaction in that context and business tends to behave in a predicable fashion, most of the time.
Attributed quote to Lincoln: "You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time." No, he probably is correct but with the Internet, "some of the people" is big enough to make a great living as a scammer.
It's inferred that this warehouse was Amazon but never confirmed http://www.motherjones.com/rights-stuff/2011/09/amazon-warehouse-heat-shipping. There is always a price for free shipping and low prices. Just because you cannot or do not want to see it, does not mean it isn't there. Now, I need to go order that Rob Zombie Voodoo Doll.
There's no way that an Android botnet exists. Google's "Don't Be Evil" edict ensures that will never occur....
I'm assuming the Chinese company is using a rule of thumb that the building has to stand one day longer than it took to build to be classified as "successful"?
I did not think there was any expectation of privacy when using corporate email and by default, web services. Would that not make the https process a moot point?
Who cares about the margin of error, exact number of years, agnostic versus atheist, church versus state separation or any of the other hair splitting. We're talking that somewhere round 40% of Americans completely discount all fact and science (the proven stuff, no theories involved) and believe that God automagically created humans as they are now. Holy craps Batman! This is 40% of a population that controls the world's only superpower. Give me a minute while I breath into a paper bag. It's one thing for nutcases in Iran to run around screaming Allah is great. It's a totally different case when a substantial portion of the US voting population effectively believes the same thing. I gotta go back to my paper bag......
For a somewhat more interesting look at Internet porn and males, this talk by Cindy Gallop is pretty good. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_oliuLf7-30 Do note that is 13 minutes long and outside of the porn-saturated attention span of most males.....
If what or who you're hunting has limited intelligence and defenses (typical target of AV spammers) then spears and rocks work just fine.
You have a point that I failed to account for that potential revenue loss. I wonder how much it is though?
Business 101: Never put impediments in front of a customer who wants to buy. This sounds like an HBR case study in the making :-)